'Worm Breeder's Gazette’, United States, 1996

PART OF:
6 copies of the "Worm Breeder's Gazette"
Made:
1996 in Minnesota
Group shot of - from front to back: 1998-600 Pt5 Volume 13 No

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Group shot of - from front to back: 1998-600 Pt5 Volume 13 No
Science Museum Group Collection
© The Board of Trustees of the Science Museum

Volume 14 No.4 (Oct 1 1996) of the "Worm Breeder's Gazette", an amateur journal for researchers working on the nematode worm Caenorhabditis elegans.

The University of Minnesota in the US published the ‘Worm Breeder’s Gazette’. It was an amateur journal for researchers working on the nematode worm (Caenorhabditis elegans). The nematode worm is a bacteria-eating round worm. It lives in soil and is often found in compost heaps. C. elegans can be either male or a hermaphrodite – meaning it exhibits the sexual features of both a male and a female. It can therefore self-fertilise. It is easy to breed, store and analyse and this makes it an excellent laboratory subject. C. elegans has been studied extensively by scientists since the 1970s, particularly within cell development research. Volume 14 No. 4 of the ‘Worm Breeder’s Gazette’ was published in October 1996. It is the green copy in this group shot.

Details

Category:
Biochemistry
Object Number:
1998-600 Pt6
Materials:
paper
Measurements:
overall: 280 mm x 220 mm
type:
magazine - periodical